Shopping & Style7 mins ago
Let's Hope Biden Brings This Barbarism To An End.
Mentally ill girl executed.
Denied spiritual adviser while dying.
https:/ /uk.yah oo.com/ news/li sa-mont gomery- final-h ours-la wyer-ex ecution -182442 353.htm l
Denied spiritual adviser while dying.
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well,if people can go abroad and drink a cocktail of drugs to end their lives I don't see why if they can't give an injection then they should use the drink. I was speaking metaphorically of how she is now not how she felt when they gave her the injection. Furthermore ,how do you think that poor pregnant woman felt knowing she was about to die ?Would she not have struggled and begged and pleaded.Was she dead when her belly was ripped open? What was done to her was far,far more horrible.
There's definitely a political element to this killing.
There are two types of execution in the USA, state and federal (sanctioned at the national level).
Federal executions have seen a huge decline. There had been none under Trump until last summer.
But the majority of Americans support the death penalty, and the election was coming. Suddenly federal executions started again. In the last few months, there have been more federal executions than in decades.
Lisa Montgomery's was a federal execution, sanctioned by Trump.
There are two types of execution in the USA, state and federal (sanctioned at the national level).
Federal executions have seen a huge decline. There had been none under Trump until last summer.
But the majority of Americans support the death penalty, and the election was coming. Suddenly federal executions started again. In the last few months, there have been more federal executions than in decades.
Lisa Montgomery's was a federal execution, sanctioned by Trump.
> I've never really understood the difference between a federal offence and a state one. Perhaps some American jurisprudist can explain.
https:/
> I don’t think a majority of Americans do support the death penalty ellipsis
From the BBC link I posted: "According to Gallup, while support for the death penalty in the US is at its lowest level in more than 50 years, 55% of Americans still believe it is an appropriate punishment for murder. And nowhere is that support more palpably felt in this case than in Skidmore."
From the BBC link I've posted twice now...
Until July 2020, there had been no federal executions for 17 years. At state level, the number of sentences and executions continues a historic decline. Only 18 death sentences were handed down in 2020 and the number of executions carried out hit a 30-year low. More recently, the states that have been carrying out executions, such as Texas and Tennessee, have halted and delayed executions because of the pandemic.
However, the executions ordered by President Trump are continuing. If they all go ahead, the federal government will have executed more people than any administration in nearly 100 years
Until July 2020, there had been no federal executions for 17 years. At state level, the number of sentences and executions continues a historic decline. Only 18 death sentences were handed down in 2020 and the number of executions carried out hit a 30-year low. More recently, the states that have been carrying out executions, such as Texas and Tennessee, have halted and delayed executions because of the pandemic.
However, the executions ordered by President Trump are continuing. If they all go ahead, the federal government will have executed more people than any administration in nearly 100 years
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.